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Author Topic: Rituals of GMH  (Read 2824 times)
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glenn adams
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« on: October 06, 2008, 04:42:41 PM »

Bringing the gods home. March 1, 2007
10 out of 11 found this review helpful

If anything jars your sensitivities, it's the claim that your brain is driving you instead of the other way around. Yet, many cognitive studies suggest that's often precisely the case. If David Lewis-Williams and David Pearce are correct, then mentally-driven activities have contributed to the making of many social conditions. One of those conditions, a universal which provides support for their thesis, is religion. The definition of "religion" has been subjected to some drastic changes lately. It's been broadened to encompass many "spiritual" themes. Today's spiritual movements tend to hark back to earlier, simpler modes. The authors assert that some of these can be traced to the Neolithic period in Europe and Western Asia.

Using the recent finds of archaeology and the cognitive sciences, the authors postulate that Neolithic society developed the foundations of religion. Moreover, religion pre-dated the adoption of agriculture and husbandry. Archaeology has revealed sites in Asia Minor suggesting that hunter-gatherer groups built shrines, seasonally visited for ritual purposes. Communities grew around these shrines and agriculture was developed to support them. The shrines marked a departure from earlier practices of dealing with the spirit realm in caves, represented by such sites as Lascaux and Chauvet as described in Lewis-William's previous book, "The Mind In the Cave" [2002]. The above-ground shrines allowed greater community participation and a new social structure. One aspect of that change was the burial of heads beneath the floors of houses. Some of the corpses may indicate more than just ancestral burial, and represent sacrifices. Was spiritual power derived from those buried heads, the authors query?

CP by Wolfscratch
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Nut44x4
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RIP Grumpy Cat :( I will miss you.


« Reply #1 on: October 06, 2008, 07:38:47 PM »

uummmmm...what does this have to do with missing persons?
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bleachedblack
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« Reply #2 on: October 06, 2008, 08:43:34 PM »

I think this thread needs to go poof.
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Nut44x4
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RIP Grumpy Cat :( I will miss you.


« Reply #3 on: October 06, 2008, 09:23:43 PM »

Me too... WTH is it? LOL. What is the point of it?
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Brothers and Sisters, I bid you beware/Of giving your heart to a dog to tear  -- Rudyard Kipling

One who doesn't trust is never deceived...

'I remained too much inside my head and ended up losing my mind' -Edgar Allen Poe
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